It’s like this one… only optimised to meet accessibility guidelines. Done automagically: strips out Javascript, mostly ignores CSS, and so on. A British invention (yay!) that deserves a wider audience.

Argh #1: I don’t know of any accessibility guidelines that require CSS to be mostly ignored. Have a look at http://www.webstandards.org/. That’s pretty good on the accessibility, but doesn’t look like it was coded in 1993.

Reigning in my web designer knee-jerk: the tool above looks like it could be a useful way to circumvent the bad design of some inaccessible sites. But I guess it doesn’t re-arrange the HTML to be semantic, so users on screen readers may still find them difficult.

Argh #2: Of course Lynx runs on OS X! OS X is just Unix, after all.

Ah. Then again, you might need 10.2 and the 10.2 Developer Tools (which are a free download, but still). Anyhoo…